Published by Oxford : Clarendon Press, s upstairs, 1911
Seller: Lady Lisa's Bookshop, Chester, United Kingdom
Hardcover. Condition: Used: Acceptable. Condition clean, former owner stamp inside cover.
Published by Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1911
Seller: Goldring Books, Eastbourne, United Kingdom
Hard Cover. Condition: Very Good. No Jacket. First. Gilt title on green cloth boards which have minor marks and wear to spine head and tail and corner tips. Internally there is a small name to front pastedown and a very small note to the margin of one page else a clean copy. Fore and lower edges uncut. xxvii + 456 pages. Illustrated frontispiece. Comprises: The conditions under which the Gospels were written, in their bearing upon some difficulties of the Synoptic Problem by W. Sanday; Three limitations to St. Luke's use of St. Mark's Gospel and Probabilities as to the so-called double tradition of St. Matthew and St. Luke by Sir John C. Hawkins; On the original order of Q, St. Mark;s knowledge and use of Q, The original extent of Q, The Literary evolution of the Gospels, On the trial of Our Lord before Herod - a suggestion by B.H. Streeter; The Book of Sayings used by the editor of the First Gospel and The Aramaic background of the Gospels by W.C. Allen; The sources of St. Luke's Gospel by J. Vernon Bartlett; The criticism of the Hexateuch compared with that of the Synoptic Gospels by W.E. Addis; A recent theory of the origin of St. Mark's Gospel by N.P. Williams; Synoptic criticism and the Eschatological problem by B.H. Streeter. PLEASE NOTE: A HEAVY VOLUME OF 0.905 UNPACKED WEIGHT WHICH MAY REQUIRE ADDITIONAL SHIPPING COST R3 Size: 8vo - over 7¾" - 9¾" tall.
Published by Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1911., 1911
Seller: Alec R. Allenson, Inc., Westville, FL, U.S.A.
VG orig. olive cloth. Upper rear corner creased. xxvii, 456 p.; front. (the four evangelists, from MS. in the Domschatz at Aachen); 22 cm. Contents: Introduction, W. Sanday -- I. The conditions under which the gospels were written, in their bearing upon some difficulties of the synoptic problem, W. Sanday -- II. Three limitations to St. Luke's use of St. Mark's gospel: 1. The disuse of the Marcan source in St. Luke ix.51-xviii.14, 2. The great omission by St. Luke of the matter contained in St. Mark vi.45-viii.26, 3. St. Luke's passion-narrative considered with reference to the synoptic problem; III. Probabilities as to the so-called double tradition of St. Matthew and St. Luke, John Caesar Hawkins -- IV. On the original order of Q; V. St. Mark's knowledge and use of Q; VI. The original extent of Q; VII. the literary evolution of the gospels; VIII. On the trial of our Lord before Herod: a suggestion, Burnett Hillman Streeter -- IX. The book of sayings used by the editor of the first gospel; X. The Aramaic background of the gospels, Willoughby C. Allen -- XI. The sources of St. Luke's gospel, James Vernon Bartlet -- XII. The criticism of the Hexateuch compared with that of the synoptic gospels, William Edward Addis -- XIII. A recent theory on the origin of St. Mark's gospel, Norman Powell Williams -- Appendix: Synoptic criticism and the eschatological problem, Burnett Hillman Streeter -- Index. Binding is Hardcover.